San Francisco’s wealthiest neighborhoods are teaming up with one of its poorest to raise money for a summer literacy camp for 200 kids from the Western Addition.

The fundraising event will bringing together grassroots organizations with tech giants to support Public Defender Jeff Adachi‘s Mo’ Magic Program.

The effort, supported by city Supervisors Mark Farrell, from the “have” neighborhoods of Marina, Seacliff and Pacific Heights, and London Breed, from the have-not Western Addition, will help pay for a five-week literacy program to stem summer learning loss.

“Research has consistently shown that students lose academic skills during the summer break and that the rate of that decline is directly tied to family socioeconomic status,” said Sheryl Davis, Mo’ Magic’s executive director. “Two-thirds of the academic achievement gap in reading and language has been attributed to summer learning loss.”

But it’s also about bridging the gap between the city’s rich and poor, which is growing faster than any other U.S. city, according to a March study by the Brookings Institution.

“Normally, the story of income inequality is one of ‘us and them,’” Adachi said in a statement. “In this case, neighborhoods that are often at odds about crime are working jointly to break the school-to-prison pipeline by providing opportunities to youth.”

While the event aims to bridge the divide, attending it will require more have than have not.

Tickets cost $100.

The More Than Magic event will be 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., Thursday, the General’s Residence, Fort Mason. Tickets are available at morethanmagic2014.eventbrite.com.

Mo’ Magic is a collaboration of community organizations working toward improving neighborhoods and the lives of young people.